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Judge Wettick Explores the Scope of Regulatory Estoppel

In Sunbeam Corp. v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 781 A.2d 1189 (Pa. 2001), the Pennsylvania Supreme Court adopted a strong application of regulatory estoppel. The question in Sunbeam was whether insurers doing business in Pennsylvania must be bound by representations made to the Pennsylvania Insurance Department by the "insurance industry." Specifically, the Supreme Court held that insurers could not argue that a specific pollution exclusion provision of a standard CGL policy meant something different from what the industry represented it meant to the Pennsylvania Insurance Department.

In Certain Underwriters at Lloyd's London v. U.S. Steel Corp., GD-12-000409 (CCP Allegheny, Dec. 11, 2014), Lloyd's argued that it should not be bound by the representations that the insurance carriers made to the Pennsylvania Insurance Department for three main reasons:

First, the language of the Lloyd's policy was developed through a different drafting history.

Second, the language of the [Lloyd's policy] differs from the language of the pollution exclusion governing domestic insurance policies.

Third, neither Lloyd's nor any of its agents made any representations to any state insurance departments, including the Pennsylvania Insurance Department.

Id. at 12 (a copy of the Opinion is attached below for easy reference). On its face, Lloyd's arguments make a lot of sense: how could a business be held accountable under a regulatory estoppel theory - which, in its classic formulation, requires a representation - for representations made by another entity?

Judge Wettick rejected this argument, stating that the Pennsylvania Supreme Court in Sunbeam intended the particular pollution exclusion language to apply to the entire industry:

I read the Pennsylvania Supreme Court's Sunbeam Opinion as extending responsibility to all insurance companies for the industry's alleged misrepresentations as a matter of public policy. Sunbeam refers to the industry's submission to the Pennsylvania Insurance Department and the insurance industry's memorandum. The Sunbeam Opinion offers no explanation why every insurance company is bound by the representations, and the Opinion never suggests that there are insurance companies not covered by the Sunbeam Opinion.

Id. (emphasis in original). The language here is striking: Judge Wettick acknowledges the blanket application of regulatory estoppel to an entire industry (even when a particular company made no necessary representation), but is beholden to the Supreme Court's broad holding.

Further explaining his rationale, Judge Wettick points to a case relied upon by the Sunbeam court: Essex Chemical Corp. v. Hartford Accident and Indem. Co., 261 F.3d 491 (3d Cir. 2001). Interestingly, Essex Chemical is both a federal case, and a case examining New Jersey law. Judge Wettick held that Lloyd's could not prevail at summary judgment on a regulatory estoppel argument simply because Lloyd's never made a representation to the Pennsylvania Insurance Department and had separate and distinct language in its policy. In support of this holding, Judge Wettick pointed out that in Essex Chemical, the court held regulatory estoppel applied to Essex Chemical even though the company's "operations began after the misrepresentations were made to the state regulators. It appears that the Court did so because the entire industry, including carriers using nonstandard pollution exclusion, may have benefited from the misrepresentation." Lloyds, at 12.

This is a remarkable outcome, and one insurers must take into account: an insurer, which did not make any representations, nor was part of an industry group that made representations to a state regulatory body, can and will be held to account for other entities' representations if it conceivably can be argued that the industry as a whole benefited from that representation.

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Firm shareholder Henry Sneath's article "The New Federal Defend Trade Secrets Act of 2016" was published in the 2016 Fall/Winter edition of USLAW Magazine.

Firm shareholder Henry Sneath's ed a CLE on the New Federal Defend Trade Secrets Act of 2016 for the Western Pennsylvania chapter of the Association of Corporate Counsel

Firm shareholder Alan Miller was named as the 2017 Best Lawyer Environmental Litigator of the Year and also was named a 2016 Super Lawyer in Insurance Coverage.

Firm shareholder Henry Sneath was named a 2016 Super Lawyer in Intellectual Property Litigation; firm shareholder Anthony Picadio was named a 2016 Super Lawyer in Business Litigation; firm associate Brandon McCullough was named a 2016 Super Lawyer Rising Star in Insurance Coverage.

On May 25, 2016, Firm shareholder Jeff Ludwikowski presented "Voir Dire and Jury Selection" with Honorable Ronald Folina, at the Crowne Plaza Pittsburgh, as part of the National Business Institute's Continuing Education Programs.

Firm shareholder Henry Sneath and firm associate led and presented at a 2-hour CLE on "Defend Trade Secrets Act (DTSA): The New Federal Private Cause of Action for Trade Secret Misappropriation."

Firm shareholder Kelly Williams spoke at the USLAW Business to Business Litigation Exchange in San Francisco on Prosecuting and Defending Business Defamation and Commercial Disparagement Claims by or Against Competitors Including Social Media Issues.

Firm shareholder Jeff Ludwikowski spoke on "Wacky Pennsylvania Construction Laws" at the U.S. Law Network Spring Conference in Rancho Palos Verdes California, which took place on April 7-9, 2016.

Firm shareholder Jeff Ludwikowski was selected to serve a two year term as Education Coordinator for the Construction Law Section of the U.S. Law Network.

Firm shareholder Bridget Gillespie and firm associate Brandon McCullough served as Regional Editors and Co-Authors of the Pennsylvania Chapter of the DRI Duty to Defend Compendium which was published in February 2016.

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Picadio Sneath Miller & Norton, P.C., is a Pittsburgh law firm that serves clients primarily in Pennsylvania, but also in other jurisdictions on a special admission basis.